Summary of Bebert's comment:
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He voted yes, he thinks that there are too many background vehicles, as he often said. Mostly on movies where he added pictures, that were polluted by other pointless pictures. He says that he does not do anything to others' movies (I guess "pictures added by others"?) but ... I cannot translate that French expression
(something like "I agree" or "I would do it", hard to explain.
Once voted yes or no, problem is not solved. Criterias have to be defined to chose if a picture will be kept or not.
Personally he does not want blurry, dark, cropped, far & zoomed pictures of some. Except for rare vehicles, i.e. those with not many pictures on the site.
He also mentions that problem of truncated/cropped/splitted pictures, that he does not like (NTD:*).
The whole image should be kept, as the director of the movie wanted it, at least as main picture.
But the area shown in a different contrast as Ralph does it seem interesting.
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(*) I add a note from myself that I add about cropped/splitted pictures: I only partially agree. I know that some old pictures were splitted because we were not using imageshack thumbnails, but in some cases the car is in a corner of the picture and the rest is really useless, so I still sometimes paste two pictures together with a black line between the two. Especially for non-DVD pictures, that are smaller, and so where I can put the two pictures side by side without having to cut too much of the scenery that is around the car.
About cropped pictures, I think that it may be used in some special cases to prevent to have two duplicated pictures, e.g.: I did it for
http://www.imcdb.org/vehicle_63323-Saturn-L-Series-2003.html and
http://www.imcdb.org/vehicle_63324-Chevrolet-Camaro.html
because I wanted to list the Camaro too.
But I agree that it is bad to crop a picture to zoom it just because the car was too small to be mentionned.
Another thing: I think that pasted pictures are find as long as the pasting can be done correctly, or if the car would really not be very visible. And when you watch the movie, your brain generates a "complete" picture that you cannot get as a still image without special tricks
Some examples:
http://www.imcdb.org/vehicle_6808-Ford-Explorer-1996.html -> do you see that it is a pasted picture? there was a guy in front of the red car, but not always at the same place. I cut in the middle of continuous colors, so all the lines or color differences that can be seen are not due to the pasting.
http://www.imcdb.org/vehicle_28677-Chevrolet-Stylemaster-1947.html => far from being perfect, but I think that it is better than having a car partially covered and then several similar thumbnails. Same for
http://www.imcdb.org/vehicle_68334-Chevrolet-Master-De-Luxe-1937.html